Pubdate: Sun, 21 Mar 1999 Source: Sunday Mail (Australia) Contact: Michael Owen PARENTS WARNED ON DRUGS Australia's peak Scouting body has told parents if they use marijuana their children should be allowed to smoke it too. The Scout Association's national executive committee has also told parents the illegal drug is not addictive and does not cause cancer or birth defects in babies. And they say those promoting marijuana are winning the battle for its widespread use. Statements are made in a new Scouts Australia publication titled Issues in Adolescent Health. Designed as a "common sense" information guide for parents, the free booklet gives advice on smoking, alcohol, sex, hard drugs, sun exposure and marijuana. On alcohol, Scouts Australia tells parents they are handling the threat of alcohol abuse by young people very well, despite figures showing 40% of teenagers drink alcohol regularly. On other adolescent health issues, the booklet states: Marijuana produces a pleasurable mild euphoria and is used by one in five teenagers every week, with 40% having experimented with the drug. At the age of 14 almost a quarter of all males and 16% of females have had sex. Among older teenage girls, 30% smoke cigarettes every week. One in ten teenagers have tried glue sniffing. Only 50% of females use sunscreen when they are at risk of sunburn. Hard drugs such as heroin and amphetamines, are growing in availability. The booklet also claims the average age of onset of adolescence is getting younger. Girls and boys have been entering puberty, younger and younger, over the past 200 years by an average advancing age of three months every decade. And Scouts Australia say there is no sign of this phenomenon "flattening", with a prediction that 100 years from now girls will be sexually mature at an average age of 8 and boys at 10. For now, the booklet says the average age of onset of adolescence in boys is about 12 years and girls about 10 years. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady